From: kitkin@aol.com (Kitkin) Newsgroups: alt.tv.quantum-leap.creative Subject: WHATEVER IT TAKES 5/9 Date: 10 Jun 1996 22:21:46 -0400 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) Message-Id: <4pil7q$55m@newsbf02.news.aol.com> WHATEVER IT TAKES PART 5 He had LEAPED this morning!! The idea still stunned him. He couldn't just tap a sequence of colored cubes, and walk back into reality....This was now reality. Shaking his head in an attempt to clear away these distracting and very disturbing thoughts, Al slipped the hand-link back into his pocket, and began again to take in his surroundings. As he walked up the sidewalk toward what appeared to be down town, he noticed an antique car at the curb. "Wow, now that's a cherry restoration!." Al said admiringly as he ran his hand over the car's fender. "Pardon me, but do you mind?" Al turned with a start, and saw a man dressed in a dark suit carrying what appeared to be an old black leather satchel. Realizing that he was blocking the driver side door, Al stepped to the side."Uh, sorry I was in the way. I guess I just got a little carried away admiring your car. It's a what, 1934, ' 35?" Pausing a moment to take a look at the interior, as the man opened the door and seated himself behind the wheel, Al continued," Boy, you sure put some money and time into this baby." It was then that Al noticed the peculiar expression on the driver's face. "1930 to be presice," he said as he slammed the car's door, and started the engine. "and although I may be a doctor sir, I can no more afford a brand new automobile than anyone else can right now, much less speculate on next year's models." With a last look of annoyed bewilderment and a perfunctory doff of his hat, the man pulled the car away from the curb and down the street. "Next year's model? What the...." but before Al could finish his train of thought, he saw just up the street, a hanging neon sign that read,"DUQUESNE BEER" Walking up to stand underneath it, Al now turned to face the establishment to which the advertisement referred. There, stensiled on the window, was "AL'S PLACE" "Bingo!" said Al, with a look of satisfaction, "This is the place." The screen door squawked in it's hinges, as he entered the strange, yet vaguely familiar bar. The interior had a comfortable feel to it, and if Al had looked through the window before coming in, he might have thought the place closed, for there wasn't a single patron in the bar. Standing off to the side near the door, he slowly took inventory the room. It had a bar of course, and in back of it, a large mirror with stacks of glassware lined up on a shelf in front of it. There were tables and chairs grouped more or less in the center of the room. Near Al, was the front window and door, several old photos in frames hanging on the adjacent wall, along with a large cabinet filled with mementos. Also in this wall, was another door, that probably lead to a supply room, and now he had come back to the bar. Walking over, but avoiding looking in the mirror, he sat on one of the barstools. With his eyes closed, he turned toward the mirror. Half expecting to see a totally unknown face looking back at him, he slowly peeked open an eyelid. "Whew. Nothin' new there." he mumbled to himself, with a sigh of relief. On the shelf of glasses behind the bar, he now noticed an old brass cash register and a few odd assorted trophies. Along the side of the mirror were more photos ,and some newspaper clippings that had been tacked up haphazardly. Then he saw it. Hanging next to a prominently displayed article about the establishment of the 21st amendment, a calendar. There was a picture of a quiet country lane, with the month of June just underneath it. But Al's gaze was focused on the date: 1934. His mind raced at the sight of it, as a bit of conversation replayed itself in his head,...."It's a what, 1934, ' 35?,.......a brand new automobile..... much less speculate on next year's models." Finally, he saw that numbers 1 through 14 were x'ed off. Today was June 15, 1934. "Oh God." Al said aloud while still staring at the calendar. "Can I help you?" If Al had jumped when the owner of the car had come up behind him, it was nothing compared to his surprise now. A breif, startled "AHHHH!" was all that came out, as he whipped around on the stool to see a stocky man with dark hair and small moustache coming out of the door that was off to the side. Al's earlier speculation about the door was correct, for the man carried a beer keg on one of his broad shoulders. Chuckling softly as he set the keg down behind the bar, he said, "Well, you startled me too. I thought I'd be closing up early tonight." As he talked, he installed the tap into the new keg."Ya' know, I'd have thought with the repeal of the ol' 18th,"he said as he indicated the prominently displayed clipping Al had seen earlier, " that I'd be a whole lot busier." When he had finished his task, he wiped his hands on his apron, and leaning across the bar asked," What'll it be?" Al, who was now standing a good two feet from the bar, and still somewhat dazed, replied shakily, "Uh, I uh just need some water right now." As the bartender put ice and water into the glass, he looked with uncertainty at Al. " Is there something else I can do for you?, I mean you still seem a little shaken". Maybe it was Al's slightly twisted sence of humor, or perhaps it was merely his way of neutralizing the hysteria that was threatening to engulf him, but what occured to him to say next, was, "Yeah, and if I don't move from this spot, I'll be shaken, not stirred." he laughed nervously, "Hey, that's a pretty good one, considering we're in a bar." His eyes still held a hint of his sanity's tenuous thread, as he nearly drained the glass in one continuous guzzle. The bartender laughed at Al's reply, but it was clear by his puzzled expression, that he didn't get the joke. He just seemed to enjoy this peculiar patron's company. Busying himself with wiping and stacking more glasses, he said, " 'Course it's more than just a bar." Upon hearing this, Al, having fully recovered, now regarded the man through squinted eyes. This was his patented ' I'm wise to you, pal' expression, and he asked with a rather suspicious tone, "Like what exactly?" Not looking up from his work, the bartender said, " Oh, you know, psychiatist's office, confessional, ...." "Waiting room maybe?" Al enterupted with the same tone as before. Now, the bartender did look up at Al, and with a strangely calm and completely serious face, answered,"Yep, even a waiting room." Slapping his hand on the bar, Al jumped to his feet. Then pointing an accusing finger at the bartender's face, he shouted, "AH HA!!" like a trial lawyer who has just made a point in his clients favor. Returning to his busy work, the bartender said,"Yeah, many an expectant father has bided his time here, instead of up at All Saints Memorial." Al's jaw snapped shut with an audible ' clap ' sound, his accusing finger still thrust in the air. Slowly, as he lowered his finger, he also began to narrow his eyes again, and quietly regarded the bartender once more. Putting his thoughts on the back burner for the time being, Al asked, "Where's the john?" Pointing to the door he had brought the keg from, the bartender said, "Through there, down the hall, second door." As Al headed across the room, he mumbled an almost inaudible"Thanks." Before he got to the door however, the bartender asked, "Can I get you something else?" as he held up Al's glass. Al weighed this question for a brief moment, then answered, "Yeah, this time, make it a beer....what ever's on tap." The bartender nodded his confirmation of the order, and Al disappeared through the door. When he came back out, the bartender was engaged in a conversation with someone on the telephone. The phone must have been under the counter somewhere, because Al would have noticed that one right off the bat, when he had first looked around. It was one of those old candlestick models, black with the bell shaped mouth piece, and separate bell shaped earpiece that was attached with a black cord. The bartender was laughing as he talked, a laugh that reminded Al of his father, back during the good times. Even if he found the bartender himself a bit enigmatic, he did like his laugh. Al sat back down at the bar and picked up his beer. It had been a long time since he had had anything with alcohol in it, and briefly wondered if he should now. "Aw, what the hell." he said, and sipped at it. With a look of utter perplexity, he held the glass up and looked at it. He sniffed at the deep gold colored liquid. Once again, his eyes drew to narrow slits. His mouth twisted to the side, as he studied first the glass, then the bartender, then back to the glass. When the bartender finally hung up the phone and returned it to it's hidden place under the counter, Al spoke."What gives? This is apple-cider!" "What's a' matter? Don't you like apple-cider?" The bartender asked. Al looked to the side as if turning towards someone sitting next to him, and made a face like,"Do you believe this guy?" Then turning back to look at the bartender, he said,"It's not what I asked for." The bartender looked curiously at Al and said, "It's not?" Sarcastically Al replied,"C'mon, it's not like you're exactly SWAMPED with customers y' know. After all, you managed to get my order right the first time, so like I said, what gives?" Shrugging, and with a low chuckle, the bartender said, "O.K. Al, you got me." "AL?!! YOU KNOW MY NAME?" Al remarked with astonishment. Leaning an elbow on the bar, the big man looked earnestly into Al's eyes, and with a trace of a smile said, "Does that really surprise you?" Barely perseptibly, Al shook his head as his eyes stayed locked on those of the bartender. "In answer to you question though, of what gives," the bartender continued, "It's like this: Sometimes, you get what you want. Sometimes, what you want, isn't what you need. And sometimes....Sometimes, what you really need, is what you get." He then gave a gesture that implied, "That's all there is to it." Noticing that the patron was not grasping the full meaning, he went on. "You wanted water, you got it. But you take this for instance," he said as he lifted the glass of apple-cider."you didn't really NEED a beer, did you?" Al remained silent, as the bartender's tone had taken on a quality he remembered from his second, no, third? wife, when she was trying to hint that he had had enough to drink. As he stood upright once more, the bartender said, "Now when Sam asked for a beer", pausing, then, softly chuckling again, he amended," a few, come to think of it, that's exactly what he got." He moved from in back of the bar to take a stool next to Al. Putting his hand on Al's shoulder, he once again met the other man's wary eyes, and said, "But then, Sam didn't have your problem, did he Al?" If anyone else had done that to him, Al would have been tempted to deck him. But looking into this man's eyes was like looking into a mirror, maybe a mirror to his soul, and all he could do was avert his eyes in mute admission. Giving Al's shoulder a gentle shake, the bartender said,"It happens sometimes Al. When enough things go wrong in a person's life, the effects start showing up somewhere, in some form. "A man's gotta learn to deal with the lousy hand he gets dealt." Al said gruffly as he shrugged the man's hand from his shoulder and got up from the stool. With his hands thrust into his pockets, he began to walk around the room, pretending to be interested in one thing or another. He finally stopped at the front window, and as he gazed out at the night sky, he reached into his inside coat pocket and took out a cigar. Not looking away from the window, he held the cigar up and asked,"You mind?" "Nope, I don't mind." the bartender answered, and Al was surprised to find that he was standing right in back of him. "Need a light?" The bartender held out a matchbook. Al accepted it without comment, and lit his cigar. .......................CONTINUED IN PART 6........................